LAC Landscape Archaeology Conference

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

LAC Landscape Archaeology Conference 4th International Landscape Archaeology Conference 22nd-25th August 2016 Dept. of Archaeology and Ancient History Valsgärde Uppsala University Valsgärde is the best preserved and most extensively excavated boat burial site in landscape the region. Objects from nearly a 100 burials can be seen at the Museum archaeology Gustavianum in Uppsala and the Gamla Uppsala museum. These graves play a key role in the ongoing Viking phenomenon project. conference Historisk-filosofiska fakulteten 3D model by Daniel Löwenborg, Uppsala University Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia L A C 2016 MONDAY 22nd AUGUST IHOPE DAY 10.00-12.00 IHOPE session A (Hörsal 4) Distributed Observing Network of the Past Chair: Tom McGovern 12.00-13.00 Lunch 13.00-15.00 IHOPE session B (Hörsal 4) Water Management and Food Security Chair: Paul Sinclair 15.00-15.30 Coffee 15.00-18.00 LAC 2016 REGISTRATION DESK OPEN 15.30-17.30 IHOPE/LAC roundtable (Hörsal 4) If the Past Teaches, what does the Future Learn? Chair: Carole Crumley 18.00-20.00 IHOPE/ LAC Opening Reception (sponsored by IHOPE) TUESDAY 23rd AUGUST 8.00- LAC2016 REGISTRATION OPENING 9.00-10.50 Plenary 1 Hörsal 3 1. Opening 2. Gaffney 3. Neubauer 4. Bewley 10.50-11.10 Coffee 11.10-13.00 Session E1 Session F1 Session B1 Session C3 Session F4 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B115 B153 Ortega et al. Schumacher et al. Gouw-Bouman et al Braemer & Geyer St. John-Brooks Heitz Coughlan et al. Kolár et al Bruins & van der Plicht Meier Glais et al. Palet et al. Jacomet Avni van Lanen Avramidis et al. Orengo et al. Tallavaara et al Knappett et al. Wright Eser Discussion Pethen 13.00-14.00 Lunch 14.00-16.00 Session E1 cont’d Session F1 cont’d Session B1 cont’d Session A2 Session C3 cont’d Session F4 cont’d Session E3 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B115 B153 Given Stagno et al. Kay et al Diachenko & Zubrow Al Karaimeh & Lucke Efkleidou Meister et al. Chelazzi Cruz Cardete Richer et al Allison Al Qudah et al Banaszek Avni et al. Kennedy Chapinal Widgren Tseng Wilson Pihokker Ben-Dor et al. Lucke & Schörner van Leusen et al. Manyanga Hladík & Tamaškovic van Rensburg Erskine Davidovich Lawrence Polonio et al. Mtetwa Nakoinz & Faupel Discussion Groenhuijzen & Verhagen Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion Rajala Pálsson 16.00-16.30 Coffee 16.30-18.30 Session C1 Session F1 cont’d Session B3 Session B2 Session E4 Session G4 Session E3 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B115 B153 Muhonen Colominas et al. Lindholm Meyer et al. Namirski Frenzel Gadot Klingborg Knockaert et al. Costello Harris et al. Sulas & French Yokoyama Cocoual Staub Jiménez-Manchón et al. Ekblom & Gillson Rowland & Hamdan Serreli Stephan et al. Kvapil Veropoulidou Discussion Tigrino et al. Muianga M. Serra van Beek et al. Mosca Pasquinucci O’Donnel Manyanga L. Serra May et al. Koukouni Sunejaa & Kamble Stagno et al. Discussion Panetta et al. Escobar et al. Discussion WEDNESDAY 24th AUGUST 08.30-10.30 Session A1 Session D3 Session G3 Session B2 cont’d Session D1 Session C6 Session A3 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B159 B153 Ertsen Collins Trinks & De Smedt Shoemaker Meier Fredengren Seppä et al. Monks & Dortch Pau et al. Heske & Posselt Rassoul & Dahli Brysbaert Oestigaard Coffman & Rasic Puy et al Frejman Christiansen Adamu Isa Díaz-Andreu & Mattioli Schwadron Lanoë et al. Schmidt Hopper et al. Dabas & Forlivesi Sinclair Gassner Gheorghiu Rogers De Bie et al. Diarte Blasco Hulin et al. Discussion Aguilar Sánchez Rundkvist Schmuck Moore Discussion Verhegge et al. Discussion Discussion Reuther et al. Discussion 10.30-10.50 Coffee 10.50-12.30 Session A1 cont’d Session D3 cont’d Session B4 Session D4 Session D1 cont’d Session C6 cont’d Session G2 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B159 B153 McGovern et al. Ruiz et al. Hoaen Hellqvist & Roth Herrera Malatesta Pintar Christie Menchelli & Iacopini Gleeson Gearey & Richer Lindkvist Veldi Halkon Kinahan Bebermeier et al. Heide & Andersen Sciuto & Hallqvist Pettersson Jensen Kolen Eklund et al. Murray Kluiving Leonard Besson Magnusson Rodéhn Micle Egberts Discussion Discussion Henselowsky et al. Discussion Discussion Discussion Jaufar 12.30-13.30 IALA founding meeting 13.00-13.30 (Hörsal 2) - Lunch 13.30-14.50 Session D3 cont’d Session B4 cont’d Session D4 cont’d Session G1 Session G2 cont’d Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A138 A144 B159 B153 Smith Pierik et al. Berg Nilsson Orengo et al. Benlloch et al. Carrer & Cavulli Martinsson-Wallin & Wallin Karlsson Petrova & Laska Graham et al. Newman Wickham-Jones et al Hjärthner-Holdar Van Eetvelde et al. Barker et al. Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 15.20-15.45 Buses to Gamla Uppsala 15.45-17.45 Site tours Gamla Uppsala 17.45-18.30 Reception at Gamla Uppsala 18.30-22.00 Conference Dinner THURSDAY 25th AUGUST 08.30-10.30 Session C5 Session A4 Session F3 Session D2 Session F2 Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A144 B115 Jacobsson Ruiz & López Wright et al. Hennius & Gustavsson Morabito et al. Petersen et al. Wright et al. Meister et al. Åstrand Huigens Kosian & Weerts Ventrelli & Chery Knabb & Rosen Rui et al. Nominoë Pierik & van Lanen Gutiérrez Soler et al. Josephson Hesse Kiimann Pereira Magalhães Kluiving et al. Baltzer Heide Wachtel Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 10.30-11.00 Coffee 11.00-12.40 Panel C5 cont’d Panel A4 cont’d Panel F3 cont’d Panel D2 cont’d Panel F2 cont’d Hörsal 2 H425 A114 A144 B115 Garcia et al. Sánchez-Palencia et al. Rambukwella Theune Rosenberg Schiestl et al. Triboi Williams Sciuto et al. Brusgaard Bunbury et al. Rodéhn Davidovich Chernysheva et al. Pennington et al. Discussion Shelach-Lavi Jönsson Dickinson Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 12.40-13.30 Lunch 13.30-16.00 Poster session 16.00-18.00 Plenary 2 Hörsal 3 1. Somadeva 2. Kinahan 3. Radimilahy 4. Closing Ceremonies 4th International Landscape Archaeology Conference 22nd-25th August 2016 Dept. of Archaeology and Ancient History Uppsala University Venue: Ekonomikum Kyrkogårdsgatan 10, 753 13 Uppsala, Sweden Contents WELCOME TO LAC2016 .......................................................................................................... 5 IALA founding meeting .............................................................................................................11 PLENARY 1 .................................................................................................................................. 12 PLENARY 2 .................................................................................................................................. 14 A. Integrated Approaches in Landscape Archaeology ....................................................16 B. Landscape Historical Ecology and Climate Change ..................................................34 C. Landscapes and Water .......................................................................................................54 D. Frontier Landscapes, Landscape Frontiers ....................................................................73 E. Mediterranean Landscape Archaeology ........................................................................93 F. Mobility and Landscape ....................................................................................................108 G. Landscape Archaeology in Practice .............................................................................. 131 Poster Abstracts .......................................................................................................................148 WELCOME TO LAC2016 UPPSALA, 22nd – 25th AUGUST 2016 Dear Colleagues, Welcome to the Fourth Landscape Archaeology Conference (LAC2016)! We hope that you will find the conference both intellectually stimulating and socially and professionally rewarding. LAC was launched in 2010 to promote interdisciplinary research across all aspects of landscape archaeology. Previous LAC conferences have been held in Amsterdam (Free University, 2010), Berlin (Free University, 2012) and Rome (Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome & Swedish Institute in Rome, 2014). The Department of Archaeology and Ancient History at Uppsala University is honoured to have been invited to organise the fourth biennial meeting, and we hope the conference lives up to all your expectations. This is the largest LAC meeting yet, and we are thankful for your level of interest and support. For those presenting oral papers and conference posters, we sincerely hope everything goes smoothly and without mishap. And for all participants, members of the Local Organising Committee and our student volunteers – easily recognisable by their LAC2016 T-shirts – are here to help, so please ask if in doubt about anything or just wanting information. We also hope you enjoy your stay in Uppsala – especially the excursion to Gamla Uppsala, and the reception and dinner that follow, and of course, for those taking part, the post-conference excursions on Gotland and around Uppland. One memory we hope that you will all take away is how central ideas about rural, urban and maritime landscapes, their study and their documentation are to the work of our department. As various posters on display throughout the conference will indicate, the Department has a long tradition of landscape research from diverse perspectives and in many different parts of the globe, from Scandinavia to southern Africa, Anatolia to Latin America. Examples of ongoing projects include Landscape Transformations and Socio-Ecological Management in Limpopo National Park, Mozambique; Collecting Sápmi: Early Modern Globalization of Sámi Material Culture and Contemporary Sámi Cultural
Recommended publications
  • The Cave of the Nymphs at Pharsalus Brill Studies in Greek and Roman Epigraphy
    The Cave of the Nymphs at Pharsalus Brill Studies in Greek and Roman Epigraphy Editorial Board John Bodel (Brown University) Adele Scafuro (Brown University) VOLUME 6 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/bsgre The Cave of the Nymphs at Pharsalus Studies on a Thessalian Country Shrine By Robert S. Wagman LEIDEN | BOSTON Cover illustration: Pharsala. View of the Karapla hill and the cave of the Nymphs from N, 1922 (SAIA, Archivio Fotografico B 326) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Wagman, Robert S. Title: The Cave of the Nymphs at Pharsalus : studies on a Thessalian country shrine / by Robert S. Wagman. Description: Boston : Brill, 2015. | Series: Brill studies in Greek and Roman epigraphy, ISSN 1876-2557 ; volume 6 | Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Identifiers: LCCN 2015032381| ISBN 9789004297616 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9789004297623 (e-book) Subjects: LCSH: Thessaly (Greece)—Antiquities. | Excavations (Archaeology)—Greece—Thessaly. | Inscriptions—Greece—Thessaly. | Farsala (Greece)—Antiquities. | Excavations (Archaeology)—Greece—Farsala. | Inscriptions—Greece—Farsala. | Nymphs (Greek deities) Classification: LCC DF221.T4 W34 2015 | DDC 938/.2—dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015032381 This publication has been typeset in the multilingual “Brill” typeface. With over 5,100 characters covering Latin, ipa, Greek, and Cyrillic, this typeface is especially suitable for use in the humanities. For more information, please see www.brill.com/brill-typeface. issn 1876-2557 isbn 978-90-04-29761-6 (hardback) isbn 978-90-04-29762-3 (e-book) Copyright 2016 by Koninklijke Brill nv, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Brill Hes & De Graaf, Brill Nijhoff, Brill Rodopi and Hotei Publishing.
    [Show full text]
  • Faunal Remains
    This is a repository copy of Faunal remains. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/169068/ Version: Published Version Book Section: Halstead, P. orcid.org/0000-0002-3347-0637 (2020) Faunal remains. In: Wright, J.C. and Dabney, M.K., (eds.) The Mycenaean Settlement on Tsoungiza Hill. Nemea Valley Archaeological Project (III). American School of Classical Studies at Athens , Princeton, New Jersey , pp. 1077-1158. ISBN 9780876619247 Copyright © 2020 American School of Classical Studies at Athens, originally published in The Mycenaean Settlement on Tsoungiza Hill (Nemea Valley Archaeological Project III), by James C. Wright and Mary K. Dabney. This offprint is supplied for personal, noncommercial use only. Reuse Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record for the item. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ Copyright © 2020 American School of Classical Studies at Athens, originally published in The Mycenaean Settlement on Tsoungiza Hill (Nemea Valley Archaeological Project III), by James C.
    [Show full text]
  • Silbury Hill – А Case Study with LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY: SILBURY HILL – a CASE STUDY LIONEL LIONEL SIMS LIONEL SIMS
    VI. LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY AND ARCHAEOASTRONOMY INTEGRATING ARCHAEOASTRONOMY Integrating Archaeology: with Landscape ArchaeoastronomySilbury Hill – а Case Study WITH LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY: SILBURY HILL – A CASE STUDY LIONEL LIONEL SIMS LIONEL SIMS Abstract Weaknesses in both archaeoastronomy and landscape archaeology can be overcome by their combination. This is demonstrat- ed through a new interpretation of Silbury Hill in Avebury, Wiltshire. If monuments in their local landscape are considered as one choice in a system of alternatives, tests can be devised to intepret the prehistoric builders‘ intentions. This exercise finds that the builders chose a prescriptive arrangement of views of Silbury Hill to simulate a facsimile of the moon entering and returning from the underworld. Key words: dark moon, crescent moon, paired alignments, Silbury Hill, West Kennet Avenue, Beckhampton Avenue, Ave- bury, underworld. Introduction with a level circular summit platform.To date, no con- vincing explanation as to its meaning has been offered. Archaeoastronomy has to move on from the legacy of Archaeologists have long expected that excavating the the Thom paradigm if it is to prove its relevance to sci- interior of the hill would reveal burials or deposited ar- ence (Sims 2006). Over the last three decades the dis- tefacts that would provide the clues to its decoding. In cipline has established robust field methods procedures spite of the many tunnels that have been dug, so much and, in so doing, falsified Thom‘s claim for a prehis- so that the Hill has now to be rescued from imminent toric precision astronomy (Thom 1971; Ruggles 1999; collapse, no burials have been found nor interpretive Hoskin 2001, Belmonte 2006; Schaefer 1993; North breakthroughs made.
    [Show full text]
  • GUIDE to GREEK RETREAT VENUES for Your Next Retreat
    Discover the Perfect Venue GUIDE TO GREEK RETREAT VENUES For Your Next Retreat RETREATS AND VENUES INDEX INDEX Contents 02 - 03 04 - 05 06 08 - 09 10 - 11 12 - 13 19 - 20 20 - 21 22 - 23 23 - 36 36 - 59 59 - 64 64 - 66 66 - 76 76 - 78 78 - 83 84 - 85 86 86 - 88 88 90 RETREAT AND VENUES Choose from a 1000+ venues vetted by www.retreatsandvenues.com our community of over 750 retreat leaders. 2 | © RETREATSANDVENUES © RETREATSANDVENUES | 3 ABOUT US ABOUT US Discover Your Perfect RETREATS Choose from a 1000+ venues & VENUES vetted by Retreat Venues our community of over 750 retreat leaders. FIND A VENUE e help retreat leaders find their perfect venue for free. Browse our Then our retreat venue experts will curate a custom list of venues that match website or book a discovery call today for a more personalized your retreat vision. We then work 1 on 1 with you to help you book or hold Wtouch. We will start by learning more about your retreat vision on your perfect venue. a discovery call (15 to 30 minutes). 4 | © RETREATSANDVENUES © RETREATSANDVENUES | 5 GREECE ORIZONTES DELUXE RESIDENCE Orizontes Deluxe Residence 9 PEOPLE 4 ROOMS CHQ VILLA RETHYMNO, CRETEF LEARN MORE Orizontes Deluxe Residence promises a one of a kind accommodation experience to the visitors of Crete and Rethymno, who look forward to Discover Your taking a vacation with their family or friends in Next Retreat Venue a high architectural and aesthetic aspirations property, which combines luxury, privacy, GREECE serenity and a magnificent view, all in one.
    [Show full text]
  • ARCHY 469 – Theory in Archaeology
    ARCHY 469 – Theory in Archaeology Lecture: TTh 1:30 – 3:20pm, SMI 307 Instructor: Debora C. Trein Instructor’s office: DEN 133 Office Hours: F 11:30 – 1:30pm, or by appointment Email: [email protected] Source: unknown artist Course Description: How do we go from artifacts to statements about the lives of people in the past? How much of the past can we truly know, when most of the pertinent evidence has long since degraded, and when the people we aim to study are long dead? This course provides a broad survey of the major theoretical trends that have shaped anthropological archaeology over time. We will outline and examine some of the major publications, debates, and shifts in archaeological thought that have influenced the diverse ways in which we claim to know what we know about the past. In this course, we will explore the notion that the various intellectual approaches we employ to make statements about the past are influenced by the different perspectives we have of the relationship between the past and the present, the kinds of meaning we believe can be derived from the archaeological record, the questions we seek to answer, and the methods we use to retrieve (and prioritize) information. This course will start with a broad overview of the major periods of theoretical development in archaeology from the 1800s to the present, followed by discussions of how archaeologists tackle common archaeological questions through diverse theoretical lenses (and why sometimes they don’t tackle these questions at all). While the politics of archaeological practice will be 1 | Page touched upon throughout the course, we will devote the last quarter of the course to the repercussions of archaeological practice to present-day communities and stakeholders.
    [Show full text]
  • Landscape Archaeology - M
    ARCHAEOLOGY – Vol. I - Landscape Archaeology - M. Gojda LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY M. Gojda Institute of Archaeology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Keywords: landscape, space, site, monument, archaeology, geography, survey, mapping, fieldwalking, non-destructivity. Contents 1. The Concept of Landscape: Past and Present 1.1 Perceptions of the Landscape and their Reflection in the Arts 1.2 Contemporary Views of the Landscape in Philosophy and the Natural Sciences 1.3 The Landscape Phenomenon in Contemporary Archaeology and Anthropology 2. Sites and Monuments in the Context of Landscape 2.1 The Birth of Interest: Founding Fathers 2.2 New Impulses: Crawford and his Discoveries 2.3 From the Archaeology of Settlements to the Archaeology of Landscapes 3. The Main Fields Concerned with Understanding Landscape Archetypes 3.1 Landscape and Spatial Archaeology 3.2 Historical and Settlement Geography, Cartography, GIS 4. Non-Destructiveness and Future Developments in Landscape Archaeology Glossary Bibliography Biographical Sketch Summary The gradually increasing awareness of the deep mutual relationships between the natural and social environments determines the ever more pronounced contemporary orientation of archaeology towards the protection and study of cultural landscapes and their historical development. The landscape is a phenomenon claimed by the advocates of both positivist (scientific) and postmodern approaches to archaeology. Each has found within it inspiration for the expansion of its paradigms. A summary is presented of the understanding to date of the landscape phenomenon and the expression of man’s relation to it in the arts, philosophy, natural sciences, and particularly in archaeology and anthropology.UNESCO The roots of the –burge EOLSSoning interest in the discovery and documentation of monuments in the landscape, and of the tracing of their relationships both to natural landscapeSAMPLE components and to eaCHAPTERSch other, are examined.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2016
    2016 Annual Report Board of Trustees Contents Message from the director 7 MANAGEMENT 9 About us: Big general data for 2016 11 Staff 14 Scientific Advisory Board 19 RESEARCH 21 Research Groups 23 Research Projects Hosted by IPHES 29 Research Projects not Hosted by IPHES 33 Research Fellowships 37 Publications 40 Activity as Referee 54 Fieldwork activity 58 Congresses, workshops & seminars 63 Short-term stay at other research centers 79 ACADEMY 83 Degrees and Doctoral Programme 85 PhD Thesis supervised and defended 87 Master Thesis supervised and defended 89 Participation in assessment Committees to evaluate PhD 93 OUTREACH 95 Conferences and talks 97 Outreach publications 104 Science education 105 Management of exhibitions 107 Participatory activities 109 Didactic contents and materials 109 Science Communication 110 KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER & SERVICES 117 2016 Message from the director Robert Sala, IPHES director/IPHES theless they still need an increase in st It is for me a pleasure to introduce the number of papers within the 1 the 2016 Annual Report of Activ- quartile. After accomplishing with ities of the Catalan Institute of Hu- good absolute figures is time for our man Palaeoecology and Social institute to gain the relative score in Evolution. IPHES is a mature institute excellence and increase our cur- st hosting very active research teams rent 31.8% of 1 quartile papers. devoted to the creation and social- isation of knowledge on the human The visibility of the research of an in- evolutionary process in all its dimen- stitute can be also measured by its sions and framework. The scientific presence in the main international activity of our institute is currently congresses.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rise and Fall of the 5/42 Regiment of Evzones: a Study on National Resistance and Civil War in Greece 1941-1944
    The Rise and Fall of the 5/42 Regiment of Evzones: A Study on National Resistance and Civil War in Greece 1941-1944 ARGYRIOS MAMARELIS Thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor in Philosophy The European Institute London School of Economics and Political Science 2003 i UMI Number: U613346 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U613346 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 9995 / 0/ -hoZ2 d X Abstract This thesis addresses a neglected dimension of Greece under German and Italian occupation and on the eve of civil war. Its contribution to the historiography of the period stems from the fact that it constitutes the first academic study of the third largest resistance organisation in Greece, the 5/42 regiment of evzones. The study of this national resistance organisation can thus extend our knowledge of the Greek resistance effort, the political relations between the main resistance groups, the conditions that led to the civil war and the domestic relevance of British policies.
    [Show full text]
  • Shanti Morell-Hart's CV
    SHANTI MORELL-HART Department of Anthropology, Stanford University, Building 50, 450 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-2034 39 Boardman Place, #204, San Francisco, CA 94103 Phone: (415) 747-0698 Email: [email protected] _______________________________________________________________________________ EDUCATION: 2002-2011: Ph.D. in Anthropology, the University of California at Berkeley (UCB) Dissertation title: Paradigms and Syntagms of Ethnobotanical Practice in Ancient Northwestern Honduras . Committee members: Rosemary Joyce (Anthropology), Christine Hastorf (Anthropology), Louise Fortmann (Environmental Science and Policy Management). 2003: M.A. in Anthropology, the University of California at Berkeley (UCB). 1999-2002: M.A. coursework in Anthropology, the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA). 1994-1998: B.A. in Latin American Studies (Concentration in Anthropology) B.A. in Anthropology (Bio-Archaeology Track) Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT Senior Project title: Insect Feasts of Mexico: Aztec Entomophagy and its Eradication and/or Appropriation by the Spanish. 1997: Coursework in History, Literature, and Archaeology (conducted in Spanish) at La Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Merida, Mexico. TEACHING EXPERIENCE: 2013-present: Lecturer at Stanford University, Stanford, CA. Courses ([undergraduate course number]/ [graduate course number]): Anthro 100B/200B: Lifeways of the Ancient Maya (AU13) Anthro 114B/200B: Landscape Archaeology and Global Information Systematics (WI14) Anthro 100B/200B: Peoples and Cultures of Ancient Mesoamerica
    [Show full text]
  • An Archaeology of Landscapes: Perspectives and Directions
    P1: GFU/GDB/GDX/LMD/GCX P2: GCR Journal of Archaeological Research [jar] PP078-295745 April 20, 2001 8:23 Style file version Nov. 19th, 1999 Journal of Archaeological Research, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2001 An Archaeology of Landscapes: Perspectives and Directions Kurt F. Anschuetz,1,4 Richard H. Wilshusen,2 and Cherie L. Scheick3 This review calls for the definition of a landscape approach in archaeology. After tracing the development of the landscape idea over its history in the social sciences and examining the compatibility between this concept and traditional archaeolog- ical practice, we suggest that archaeology is particularly well suited among the social sciences for defining and applying a landscape approach. If archaeologists are to use the landscape paradigm as a “pattern which connects” human behavior with particular places and times, however, we need a common terminology and methodology to build a construct paradigm. We suggest that settlement ecology, ritual landscapes, and ethnic landscapes will contribute toward the definition of such a broadly encompassing paradigm that also will facilitate dialogue between archaeologists and traditional communities. KEY WORDS: landscape; culture; paradigm; epistemology. INTRODUCTION The intellectual foundations of contemporary landscape approaches in ar- chaeology may be traced back to at least the 1920s (Stoddard and Zubrow, 1999, p. 686; discussed later). Despite their historical depth in the discipline’s develop- ment, until recently landscape approaches largely were subsumed within archae- ological inquiry to provide a backdrop against which material traces were plotted and evaluated (Knapp and Ashmore, 1999). Now, as evident from a review of the previous decade of Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting Abstracts, 1Rio Grande Foundation for Communities and Cultural Landscapes, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504- 8617.
    [Show full text]
  • ATINER's Conference Paper Series LNG2015-1524
    ATINER CONFERENCE PAPER SERIES No: LNG2014-1176 Athens Institute for Education and Research ATINER ATINER's Conference Paper Series LNG2015-1524 Applying Current Methods in Documentary Linguistics in the Documentation of Endangered Languages: A Case Study on Fieldwork in Arvanitic Efrosini Kritikos Independent Researcher Harvard University USA 1 ATINER CONFERENCE PAPER SERIES No: LNG2015-1524 An Introduction to ATINER's Conference Paper Series ATINER started to publish this conference papers series in 2012. It includes only the papers submitted for publication after they were presented at one of the conferences organized by our Institute every year. This paper has been peer reviewed by at least two academic members of ATINER. Dr. Gregory T. Papanikos President Athens Institute for Education and Research This paper should be cited as follows: Kritikos, E. (2015). "Applying Current Methods in Documentary Linguistics in the Documentation of Endangered Languages: A Case Study on Fieldwork in Arvanitic", Athens: ATINER'S Conference Paper Series, No: LNG2015-1524. Athens Institute for Education and Research 8 Valaoritou Street, Kolonaki, 10671 Athens, Greece Tel: + 30 210 3634210 Fax: + 30 210 3634209 Email: [email protected] URL: www.atiner.gr URL Conference Papers Series: www.atiner.gr/papers.htm Printed in Athens, Greece by the Athens Institute for Education and Research. All rights reserved. Reproduction is allowed for non-commercial purposes if the source is fully acknowledged. ISSN: 2241-2891 19/07/2015 ATINER CONFERENCE PAPER SERIES No: LNG2015-1524 Applying Current Methods in Documentary Linguistics in the Documentation of Endangered Languages: A Case Study on Fieldwork in Arvanitic Efrosini Kritikos Independent Researcher Harvard University USA Abstract Arvanitic is a language of Greece also called Arberichte or Arvanitika.
    [Show full text]
  • ENG-Karla-Web-Extra-Low.Pdf
    231 CULTURE AND WETLANDS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN Using cultural values for wetland restoration 2 CULTURE AND WETLANDS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN Using cultural values for wetland restoration Lake Karla walking guide Mediterranean Institute for Nature and Anthropos Med-INA, Athens 2014 3 Edited by Stefanos Dodouras, Irini Lyratzaki and Thymio Papayannis Contributors: Charalampos Alexandrou, Chairman of Kerasia Cultural Association Maria Chamoglou, Ichthyologist, Managing Authority of the Eco-Development Area of Karla-Mavrovouni-Kefalovryso-Velestino Antonia Chasioti, Chairwoman of the Local Council of Kerasia Stefanos Dodouras, Sustainability Consultant PhD, Med-INA Andromachi Economou, Senior Researcher, Hellenic Folklore Research Centre, Academy of Athens Vana Georgala, Architect-Planner, Municipality of Rigas Feraios Ifigeneia Kagkalou, Dr of Biology, Polytechnic School, Department of Civil Engineering, Democritus University of Thrace Vasilis Kanakoudis, Assistant Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Thessaly Thanos Kastritis, Conservation Manager, Hellenic Ornithological Society Irini Lyratzaki, Anthropologist, Med-INA Maria Magaliou-Pallikari, Forester, Municipality of Rigas Feraios Sofia Margoni, Geomorphologist PhD, School of Engineering, University of Thessaly Antikleia Moudrea-Agrafioti, Archaeologist, Department of History, Archaeology and Social Anthropology, University of Thessaly Triantafyllos Papaioannou, Chairman of the Local Council of Kanalia Aikaterini Polymerou-Kamilaki, Director of the Hellenic Folklore Research
    [Show full text]